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The Integration of Open Educational Resources

Into Your Library

Jan. 31, 2015 | #alamw15 | Chicago, IL

Quill West Pierce College District

Kristi Jensen University of Minnesota

Shan Sutton

Oregon State University

"How  to  teach  undergrads  how  to  become  open  source  contributors…"  by  opensource.com  is  licensed  under  CC  BY-­‐SA  2.0  

"Accounts  book"  by  Alexander  Baxevanis  is  licensed  under  CC  BY  2.0  

Returns  on  Investment  

"How  to  teach  undergrads  how  to  become  open  source  contributors…"  by  opensource.com  is  licensed  under  CC  BY-­‐SA  2.0  

"Adventures  in  copyright"  by  opensource.com  is  licensed  under  CC  BY-­‐SA  2.0  /  A  derivaGve  from  the  original  work  

Faculty  A*tudes    about  OER  and  

What  That  Means    for  Libraries  Today  

   KrisG  Jensen,  eLearning  Librarian  

University  of  Minnesota    

Public domain image from the Noun Project - http://thenounproject.com/term/ecosystem/27821/

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/06/education/aid-for-higher-education-declines-as-costs-rise.html

http://chronicle.com/article/Borrowers-Average-Debt-at/143381/

http://chronicle.com/article/Inside-the-Flipped-Classroom/141891//

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/18/education/what-color-is-your-online-adult-course.html?_r=0

http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/2-senators-will-offer-bill-promoting-open-access-textbooks/48359

Public domain image from the Noun Project - http://thenounproject.com/term/ecosystem/27821/

Impact on Faculty

•  Pressure to think about teaching and learning in their classrooms in new and innovative ways

•  Developing awareness and concern about: –  the increased cost of higher education today for

their students –  issues related to the current and developing

business models for textbooks –  the impact of high textbook prices on academic

success

Faculty and OER Today

•  Awareness of OER

•  Reusing Content

•  Willing to Share

http://www.onlinelearningsurvey.com/reports/openingthecurriculum2014.pdf

http://www.onlinelearningsurvey.com/reports/openingthecurriculum2014.pdf

Why do Libraries have a role

in supporting the adoption of OER?

http://www.onlinelearningsurvey.com/reports/openingthecurriculum2014.pdf

http://www.flickr.com/photos/epublicist/8718123610/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.0/

U of M Libraries eLearning Goals •  Student affordability •  Lowered student and faculty frustration selecting

and accessing course content (textbooks, coursepacks, supplementary materials etc.)

•  Streamline faculty processes related to course content - save faculty time

•  Support for open education and open access initiatives

•  Contribute to U of M eLearning efforts as they develop further

•  Provide guidance around copyright and IP concerns

U of M Libraries eLearning Themes •  Threading support for open through all of our activities. •  Partnerships on campus and beyond. •  Creating new opportunity spaces for course content

conversations. •  Positioning ourselves to be involved at key

opportunity/decision-making points (e.g., course design or redesign).

•  Broadening our reach by demonstrating and educating others about our content services and support.

•  What role can we play to promote these goals at the state and national level?

Digital Coursepack Pilot: In the Flow and Support Services

•  Integrated into Moodle (CMS) environment. •  Includes a variety of content types including

open content, library licensed content, royalty based content, fair use content, and faculty created content in one “online package.”

•  Support services developing around open content and other alternative course content.

Coordinated Service Model: Benefits to the Libraries

•  Goal: Develop streamlined support for Teaching and Learning on Campus

•  U of M Libraries had the opportunity to: •  shape the processes for working with faculty •  give a voice to content issues that were not

previously considered •  leverage the inclusion of content issues in the

expected culture change •  and build trusting, highly collaborative

relationships with campus partners who are often the first point of contact for faculty.

Add link here

open.umn.edu

open.umn.edu

Open Textbook Network

•  Faculty education and engagement with Open Textbooks

•  Libraries and campus support staff training •  Targeted faculty recruitment and small

incentives to support participation lead to the adoption of Open Textbooks

•  For additional info: http://z.umn.edu/opentextbooks

Partnership for Affordable Content (PfAC)

●  Issue a call for Expressions of Interest – Spring 2015. ●  Provides faculty with a small stipend ($500 to $1500) to

explore more affordable alternative content for their course. ●  Brings together all of our eLearning content efforts to date

– Digital Course Packs, Open Textbooks, Coordinated Service Model.

●  Results in the creation of teams (potentially including campus partners) to support faculty exploring affordable content.

●  Showcase success stories to leverage future work with faculty in these areas.

What Libraries/Librarians Can Do •  Become conversant with OER issues – become

Mythbusters and an Open Textbook sales rep •  Develop an understanding of the needs and opportunity

spaces within your ecosystem to support open content adoptions

•  Be strategic – where can you have the most impact or a quick win to build momentum for future success

•  Form campus partnerships that provide a presence at key discussions/decision-making points related to course content

•  Establish your short term goals but keep the long term end game in mind too

•  Inspire your colleagues at home, the state, and national level to invest in supporting OER

What Libraries/Librarians MUST Do •  Become conversant with OER issues – become

Mythbusters and an Open Textbook sales rep •  Develop an understanding of the needs and opportunity

spaces within your ecosystem to support open content adoptions

•  Be strategic – where can you have the most impact or a quick win to build momentum for future success

•  Form campus partnerships that provide a presence at key discussions/decision-making points related to course content

•  Establish your short term goals but keep the long term end game in mind too

•  Inspire your colleagues at home, the state, and national level to invest in supporting OER

Resources •  ALLEN, I Elaine and SEAMAN, Jeff. Opening the Curriculum: Open Educational

Resources in U.S. Higher Education, October 2014, Babson Survey Research Group. Available at <http://www.onlinelearningsurvey.com/reports/openingthecurriculum2014.pdf>.

•  Centre for Educational Research and Innovation and OECD. 2007. Giving knowledge for free: the emergence of open educational resrouces. Available at: http://www.oecd.org/edu/ceri/38654317.pdf

•  GRODECKA, Karolina and ŚILIWOWSKI, Kamil. Open Educational Resources Mythbusting. Available at http://mythbusting.oerpolicy.eu/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/OER_Mythbusting.pdf

•  HARLEY, Diane, et.al. Affordable and open textbooks: an exploratory study of faculty attitudes. California Journal of Politics and Policy. Volume 2, Issue 1, ISSN (Online) 1944-4370, June 2010.

•  MCKERLICH, Ross Charles; IVES, Cindy; MCGREAL, Rory. Measuring use and creation of open educational resources in higher education. The International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning, [S.l.], v. 14, n. 4, sep. 2013. ISSN 1492-3831. Available at: <http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1573>.

•  REED, Peter. Awareness, attitudes and participation of teaching staff towards the open content movement in one university. Research in Learning Technology, [S.l.], v. 20, oct. 2012. ISSN 2156-7077. Available at: http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/view/18520

•  ROLFE, Vivien. Open educational resources: staff attitudes and awareness.Research in Learning Technology, [S.l.], v. 20, feb. 2012. ISSN 2156-7077. Available at: http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/view/14395

•  WILEY, David. The Babson OER survey and the future of OER adoption. November 3, 2014. Available at http://opencontent.org/blog/archives/3619.

kjensen@umn.edu      

KrisG  Jensen,  eLearning  Librarian  University  of  Minnesota  

 

FacilitaGng  Faculty  Development  of  OER  

Shan  C.  SuSon    

Associate  University  Librarian  for  Research  and  Scholarly  CommunicaGon  

 Oregon  State  University  Libraries  and  Press  

Open  Textbook  Publishing  •  Oregon  State  University  

–  A  collaboraGon  among  OSU  Libraries,  OSU  Press,  and  Open  Oregon  State.  

 •  SUNY-­‐Geneseo  

–  Lead  by  Geneseo  in  partnership  with  libraries  at  other  SUNY  campuses  and  colleges  in  New  York.  

•  Portland  State  University  –  Provost-­‐funded,  selecGon  commiSee  includes  Faculty  Senate  Library  CommiSee  members,  an  instrucGonal  designer  from  the  Office  of  Academic  InnovaGon,  and  a  representaGve  from  ASPSU.  

OER  Development  Through  Faculty  Grants  

•  North  Carolina  State  University  

•  Kansas  State  University  

•  San  Jose  State  University/Chico  State            University    •  Temple  University    •  UMass-­‐Amherst  

Common  Elements  of  the  OER  Development  Grant  Model  

•  Typical  grant  amount  is  $1,000  •  Focus  is  on  replacing  tradiGonal  textbooks  with  low  or  no  cost  alternaGves  

•  May  include  online  reading  packets,  or  use  of  non-­‐open  library-­‐licensed  materials  

•  Librarians  o[en  assist  in  idenGficaGon  of  informaGon  resources  as  textbook  alternaGves.  

Open  EducaGon  and  Open  Access  

•  How  should  these  coalesce  at  academic  libraries?  

 

SPARC OER Page http://sparc.arl.org/issues/oer

OER Institute Resources http://tinyurl.com/oer-institute

Libraries & OER Forum http://tinyurl.com/sparc-liboer

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The Integration of Open Educational Resources

Into Your Library

Jan. 31, 2015 | #alamw15 | Chicago, IL